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If you've seen my
review of Three Parts Dead, you
know that I had high hopes for Two
Serpents Rise, and Max Gladstone
completely delivered.

Two Serpents Rise is not exactly a sequel; it's set
in the same world but in another part of it. There are occasional references to
the city Alt Coulumb, but this book stands
on its own. It also works as some sort of blend of epic and urban fantasy: epic
in scope yet grounded very specifically in a secondary world city.

The city of Dresediel Lex is clearly inspired by Aztec mythology, but Max didn't limit himself to just Aztec
ideas. The history of priests sacrificing to gods is certainly present, but
then again, in the very first scene the goddess of gambling also makes an
appearance, setting up the motif of balancing risk that runs throughout.

And the running! It's like Parkour
gone insane, and Parkour is not exactly the safest sport to begin with.

Structurally this book is a bit different
particularly in regards to POV, in that, except for some interludes, there's
only one POV up until the end. For a couple of chapters I was waiting for it to
switch, but in retrospect I see why that couldn't have worked.

Like Three
Parts Dead, another craft/law firm is central to this story, even though
the protagonist this time around isn't a craft user. We get to see a different
magic that is more tied to the gods. And I loved seeing technology like
elevators in this setting, because technological development shouldn't stop
just because a world is mostly powered by magic. This book gives a lot to think
about in regards to the notions of progress and civilization without giving any
easy answers.

Really, the author did a wonderful job of not
making any character the straw man, especially in regards to dealing with
religion. The issue here is not a matter of whether people believe in gods, but
what they owe gods, what they owe us,
and how those interact. Is being a diehard believer the right approach, or is
it better to completely renounce the gods? Is there some middle ground, and if
so, what is that in-between road, and how do you navigate it? What is the value
of knowing your place in society contrasted with the uncertainty of having to
struggle to find it?

Every character has completely valid points and
reasons for believing mutually exclusive views. No argument about the issue of
religion is ever “won,” because everyone knows how much more complicated it is,
how personal it is, and it's personal for these characters.

And the characters' personal ties
really are integral to everything else going on, all the kinds of ties that
bind: contractually, romantically, philosophically, filially, religiously — how
they all intertwine and how far, how deep those ties can go, and what that
means for us.

I love how organically all of
these issues work in the social and political framework, the characters,
everything. I love that there are no taboos on sexual orientation or on having
sex at all. The characters are all riveting, even when I don't like them — I
particularly loved the Red King, who
is creepy as anything and completely amazing.

All this and I haven't even gotten
around to mentioning the whole story is built around economics and the
logistical realities of providing water to an urban settlement in the desert
and the risks of water conflict — I challenge anyone who thinks fantasy doesn't
deal with reality and is purely about escapism to take a harder look at this
one.

I really can't recommend this book
and this series highly enough. Give it a shot.

OFFICIAL BOOK BLURB: Devi Morris isn't your average mercenary. She has plans. Big ones. And a ton of ambition. It's a combination that's going to get her killed one day - but not just yet. That is, until she just gets a job on a tiny trade ship with a nasty
reputation for surprises. The Glorious Fool isn't misnamed: it likes to get into trouble, so much so that one year of security work under its captain is equal to five years everywhere else. With odds like that, Devi knows she's found the perfect way to get the jump on the next part of her Plan. But the Fool doesn't give up its secrets without a fight, and one year on this ship might be more than even Devi can handle.

AUTHOR INFORMATION: Rachel Bach (Rachel Aaron)lives in Athens, Georgia with her family. She has graduated from University of Georgia with a B.A. in English Literature. She has been an avid reader since her childhood and now has an ever-growing collection to show for it. She loves gaming, Manga comics & reality TV police shows. She also blogs occasionally on the Magic Districts website

CLASSIFICATION: The Paradox series is an action-packed SF series with romantic
elements. Think of it as “Kate Daniels in armor and fighting aliens in space” or possibly a female heroine version of the Shadow Warrior series by Chris Bunch.

FORMAT/INFO:Fortune’s Pawn is 340 pages long divided over sixteen numbered chapters. Narration is in the first person solely via Deviana “Devi” Morris. There's also an excerpt from Honor's Knight (book II if the Paradox trilogy) and an interview with Rachel Aaron in the Extras section.November 5, 2013 marks the Trade paperback and e-book publication of Fortune's Pawn via Orbit Books.

ANALYSIS (Liviu):Fortune’s Pawn is an addictive page turner with a great narrator and a weird and interesting character list all set in an intriguing universe that is of the advanced technology, space polities, humanity, aliens, space fleets etc future with magic - or possibly unexplained science of course kind - while the set-up reminded me of the Shadow Warrior series of Chris Bunch to a large extent.

The author wrote also the Eli Monpress series as Rachel Aaron and while I liked the writing well enough in the first volume, I had no intention of reading more because the content and the style were of the kind I find both anachronistic and annoying in fantasy, while here in sf same thing works very well - I am not sure why as this happens all the time with sf stuff I love but would not touch were it fantasy, but I guess I do not find current attitudes, mores, wisecracks believable when set in a pre-industrial world.

So the typical
action-adventure mil-sf seen tons of times, but the details and the voice and of course the fact that I love this sub-genre when done well made all the difference and I got hooked and plan to read the next
installment - set for 2-14 - as soon as I can get a copy

Tough heroine Devi from the space kingdom of Paradox which is led by a divine God-king wants to become an elite warrior - Devastator - of the King's
guard so when she gets to the highest combat rung of the top mercenary commando outfit of Paradox, she needs to find "the next level" to have a chance and be invited to apply for a Devastator position

Somewhat to her annoyance that next level turns out to be an usually lowly ship-guard position on a tramp freighter with a weird crew, whose Captain Caldswell is a Terran Republic former officer to boot - as the
main human polities, Paradox and Terra fought quite a few "border" wars across time - but that is what she hears from her contacts at court...

And of course you know the spiel - nothing is as it seems - but as
mentioned the cast is awesome bringing together members of the other two main material sentient races of the Galaxy - there is a fourth powerful species, the Lelgis, but they are essentially energy beings/spirits
whose material manifestations are meat drones.<

First there are the bird-like Aeon, whose representative, Basil - love the name too - is the ship XO and offers a lot of comic relief with his self-importance as after all "the monkeys" gotta be supervised and then the dinosaur like predators Xith-cal who love the humans and the aeons a lot - as dinner of course and they raise them as "cattle", though the meat drones of the Lelgis are poisonous to them, so a large part of both the Terran and Paradoxian commandos' job is to fight slavers and Xith-cal hordes to free their human slaves and on
meeting a Xith-cal, their reaction is always to shoot on sight.

In a very nice touch, the Xith-cal's representative Hyrek, is the doctor of the ship - as Hyrek puts it,
experience as a Xith-cal butcher gave him all the insight he needs in the biology of humans and aeons. In addition to the two "aliens" we have some humans who may be even more "alien": the astrogator space hippie Nova (scape Starchild) who can see auras and do psychic stuff like levitation, the captain's daughter Ren who is strange and well (read to find out more) and not least the handsome cook Rupert who well (same as above)...

Adventures, battles, fights, intrigues, romance and all that you want in a fast and furious package that has only one flaw, namely that it ends so fast. The extract from book two, Honor's Knight, which picks up where this ends just makes me regret I do not have that book now. Highly recommended.

ANALYSIS (Mihir): This
was another awesome book from the mind that gave us the wonderful Legend Of Eli
Monpress series. Rachel had mentioned this book in her previous interview with us last year and after finishing it, I think can be best summed up as "Kate Daniels in
space with armor". The author builds up an interesting universe that I’m sure will be explored in the sequel books. What this book is simply awesome and here’s what it’s about.

Deviana "Devi" Morris is a mercenary very much in the Kate Daniels mold, that is tough, extremely competent, headstrong & packing a lot more power than is apparent. Devi is a person who does things her own way, be it her personal or professional lives. Her aim is to be the best at her job so she can attract enough attention and commendations to be called to join the Devastator unit which serves the king directly. She is a citizen of Paradox
which is ruled by a god-king. Democracy is heretical to them and violence is second nature. She is unapologetic and extremely focused on becoming a part of the Devastators [Royal Paradoxian unit] that gets to play by her own rules. Her path to becoming a devastator however goes through a year of guard duty on the
Glorious Fool.

The Glorious Fool has a high mortality rate for its crew as well as the mercenaries that protect it. This ship’s captain Brian Caldswell has a worse reputation than his ship when it comes to dangerous missions
however his worth and ideals are admired throughout interstellar space. Devi will learn that the captain plays his
own game and his crew is even more shrouded in ambiguity. The story then focuses on Devi and the journey she will take as a security team member of the Glorious Fool.
The author sets the book to be a rip-roaring ride full of action, intrigue, snarky talk and a very interesting universe that has four sentient races (as detailed above by Liviu) and many possibilities about what actually is
happening. Firstly here’s why I loved this book so much, the characterization is top notch. Devi Morris is an absolute kick-ass character who will keep the reader glued on to her antics as well as the overall plot twists. The author has to be commended for setting this story in first person and making it so enthralling. Devi constantly keeps the readers on her toes and the way she’s goes about things (like giving her armor and weaponry, names such as Mia, Sasha & Lady Grey or having her way in relationships). Devi as a character is absolutely a riveting one and is one of my favorite narrators being written about.

Secondly the world or universe-building is absolutely engrossing, beginning with the four sentient races, or the curious split between Terran and Paradoxian humanity and all the secrets surrounding the crew of the Glorious Fool. The author makes it absolutely intriguing as she drops enough hints and peeks about what might be happening so as to grab the readers for the remaining books in the series. Thirdly the pace and plot twists are absolutely top-notch, they keep the reader hooked and with the way the book ends. The book wonderfully mixes action with romantic elements along with the Sci-fi aspect of the story.I can bet that the readers (like me) can’t wait to read Honor’s Knight to see what happens next with Devi and the Glorious Fool inhabitants.

I didn't find any things to nit-pick about this book, no issues at all and so I would like to simply say that this was one of my three top reads of this year irrespective of genre.CONCLUSION: Fortune’s Pawn by Rachel Bach (nee Aaron) is a wonderful read; it encompasses various different genre elements and yet makes itself original enough to stand out among various SF reads. Be sure to read Fortune’s Pawn as otherwise you will be missing out on a fun book and a superb story.

One of the reckoning points when we watch apocalyptic shows like Revolution, the Walking Dead or the series Life After People is how quickly life as we know it vanishes without the power grid, at least for those of us in First World existences.
Without electricity, settlements in areas of extreme heat (like Las Vegas) or cold (like North Dakota), or that rely on either irrigation for water supply or on power to rid them of excess water could not sustain the population under natural conditions, at least not on the scale to which they have developed.

High rise buildings are not sustainable without electricity to run the elevators and provide light, heat, water flow and necessary services. City sanitation breaks down without sewer treatment facilities and garbage trucks can't pick up trash if electric gas pumps don't work.

In my novel Ice Forged, magic functions like the culture's power grid. Most magic is of the small, convenient and useful variety--protecting crops from pests, draining swampy areas, preserving food, and the like. Magic is their science, and those small magics undergird more of their everyday existence than anyone realizes until one day, the magic disappears. A devastating war with the neighboring kingdom provokes the battle mages on both sides to employ a doomsday strike. The strike has the unforeseen consequence of breaking the bonds that had made it possible for people to control magic and returning the power to its wild, untamed state. Fire rains from the sky, weather becomes more extreme, and in all the hundreds of ways in which people had depended on small magics, life falls apart.

One man might be able to restore the magic, but there are factions that like the opportunity chaos provides, and therein hangs the tale.

While I'm not usually a fan of modern apocalyptic stories, I was intrigued by the premise for Ice Forged for a couple of reasons. First, because it's a medieval apocalypse, which was suited to an epic fantasy format. And secondly, because the idea of struggling to do things the old way, without magic, just got a hold of my imagination and wouldn't let go.

Back in the 1970s, when the back-to-nature movement got started, the Foxfire books seemed to be on everyone's bookshelves. These books sought to impart what most of our great-grandmothers and grandfathers knew (and what the Amish and other cultures without modern technology still do, but city-dwellers don't). Canning, growing a backyard garden, folk cures and low-tech solutions suddenly became interesting as people began to wonder about sustainability and the unintended consequences of pesticides, EMF fields, chemical additives and other modern "miracles."

I was on an apocalypse panel at Dragon*Con where we were talking about what it would look like 10 years after The Event. We agreed that preserving the accessible (no disk drives!) forms of knowledge that explain how to do the crucial things (farming, first aid, surgery, canning, etc.) would be essential for society to rebuild in less time than it required to evolve those technologies the first time around. Blaine's world has to go back four hundred years to find out how things were done without magic, so the transition is even starker. And in order to try to fix things, you've got to live long enough to make the attempt.

In Ice Forged, one group that adjusts without difficulty to the lack of magic is the talishte, the immortal vampires. They remember how things were done centuries ago because they were around when it was done that way. And while they're quite capable of coping without magical conveniences, some of the talishte join forces with my hero, Blaine McFadden to bring back the magic because they appreciate the civilizing value and the convenience that "power grid" provided.

It's the little things that disappear when the world ends, as much as the big things. In Blaine's world, when the magic fails, both the living and the undead have their reasons to get the world back on track, and their enemies have just as many reasons to want the dark times to stay as dark as possible.

Come check out all the free excerpts, book giveaways and other goodies that are part of my Days of the Dead blog tour! Trick-or-Treat you way through more than 30 partner sites where you'll find brand new interviews, freebies and more--details at my website.

Ice Forged will be a Kindle Daily Deal with a special one-day price of just $1.99 only on October 31! Get it here

AUTHOR INFORMATION: Gail began writing fiction as a child and she was always a voracious reader since childhood, she frequently chose to read books with a supernatural slant, including folktales, compilations of regional ghost stories and gothic mysteries. She credits the TV show Dark Shadows with her life-long fascination with vampires. She discovery SF and fantasy during middle and high school and that has fueled her writing journey. She graduated from The Pennsylvania State University with an M.B.A. in Marketing and Management Information Systems.

Gail is the author of Ice Forged in The Ascendant Kingdoms Saga and the upcoming Reign of Ash (Orbit Books, 2014), plus the Chronicles of the Necromancer series (Solaris Books) and The Fallen Kings Cycle (Orbit Books). Next year, she also launches a new urban fantasy novel, Deadly Curiosities, from Solaris Books. She is also the author of two series of ebook short stories: The Jonmarc Vahanian Adventures and the Deadly Curiosities Adventures.

For more about Gail’s books and short stories, follow her on Twitter @GailZMartin, and join her for frequent discussions on Goodreads.

"It's 1926, and the
desire to summit the world's highest mountain has reached a fever-pitch
among adventurers. Three young friends, eager to take their shot at the
top, accept funding from a grieving mother whose son fell to his death
on Mt. Everest two years earlier. But she refuses to believe he's dead,
and wants them to bring him back alive.

As they set off toward
Everest, the men encounter other hikers who are seeking the boy's body
for their own mysterious reasons. What valuable item could he have been
carrying? What is the truth behind the many disappearances on the
mountain? As they journey to the top of the world, the three friends
face abominable choices, actions--and possibly creatures. A
bone-chilling, pulse-pounding story of supernatural suspense, THE
ABOMINABLE is Dan Simmons at his best."

With a blurb that is both factually wrong - as the action takes place in 1925 - and misleading as the novel while having a lot of a suspense true, has nothing of the supernatural, The Abominable is one of the prime example of how a potentially awesome and memorable novel is ruined by conventional action that lacks any imagination or subtlety.

For about
500 pages, The Abominable is an extremely engrossing story of mountaineering with lots of
technical details that ground it in reality, showing once again that
what's possible really depends a lot of what level of technology we are
at. Incidentally the book made me read a little about the Mt. Everest
expeditions and how today what was once a dangerous adventure for the
very few became a relatively common place thing at least for fit people
with enough cash to pay for equipment and permits, and this is quite
cheering as I expect similar things to happen with near space travel...

But then The Abominable becomes the worst sort of "dumb Nazi supermen" against plucky
heroes, not to speak of all the cliches regarding the heroes themselves and the Shangri La ending. In addition, the book is set in 1925 when Adolf Hitler was a blip
on the horizon - a lunatic with charisma and dangerous ideas, but there
were tons of such across history and only very specific circumstances - essentially the sudden impoverishment of the developed world after the
1929 crash - brought him to power, while other specific circumstances - the Carthaginian peace of Versailles against what is by nature the most
powerful nation of Europe since after all there was a reason the French,
Spanish and later Habsurgs tried and succeeded in keeping Germany a
dis-united war zone for so many centuries, while even after the complete
devastation of 1945, in under 10 years Germany became the most
prosperous nation in Europe again, truncated and all - allowed him to try
and conquer the world and implement his genocidal policies, so the
whole Nazi stuff is even stupider than if the book were set in 1938 for
example a la Indiana Jones and this last at least was brainless entertainment
and never aspired to more, but The Abominable was supposed to be an interesting
novel...

This being so, the extraordinary writing skills of the
author and the narrative momentum of the novel, still made The Abominable a
recommended book, but with even a little more subtlety in its last 150
pages it could have been an excellent and possibly awesome one...

"It's
2133. A priceless Vermeer is making its way back to Earth. Freelance
Spacer Nick Wesley is charged with protecting the painting as it comes
on board The Polly-Ann, the eccentrically re-fit cross system
space-hauler of notorious Count Simwe Skaw. With Skaw poised to make a
move, Nick secures the masterpiece with a so-called quantum lock.
Meanwhile, back on Earth riots in Equator City are threatening stability
of the C. Clarke Elevator. Even if he manages to outwit Skaw and his
minions, Nick just might not make it back for Nora's Sunday Brunch on
Penobscot Bay...

High Wichita is a key novelette in Mark von
Schlegell's still un-winding science fiction future history, The System
Series. A missing link between the novels Venusia (2005) and Mercury
Station (2009), High Wichita is both a love-letter to pulp fiction and a
pot-boiling caper story of its own."

High Wichita is a mind bending novella set in the
universe of Venusia and Mercury Station and it is nicely illustrated too. Excellent stuff that contains quite a lot within 55 pages, mostly taking place across a Solar System liner of the author's imaginative 22nd century and is self-contained as its action goes, but it is directly related to the author's two novels set in the same universe, most notably, Mercury Station. Excellent stuff overall and here is a quote to illustrate the richness of the setting, while you can read more in the sample at Smashwords:

"Painting is a perfect pastime for the long hours of space travel. As the Lunar linershuttle came into equal velocity with the Polly-Ann, Nick Wesley was just putting the finishing touches on a rather successful paint-by-numbers portrait of his adorable wife. Now he laid his brush on the toppler and strolled to the windowmirror to take a gander at that legendary ship.

Four thousand kilometers over Luna City, Count Skaw's refit grainovator bulged with eccentricity and complication. The hull's quasicrystal skin shoneyellow like a Chinese fish. Broad swaths of lightsuckers wrapped off and around the diamond barnacles of the sparkling, parasite autonomies, the stuck-on eateries, brothels, casinos, churches, markets and hotels, by which Polly-Ann paid for her own passage. The heraldry of the Concerns was not to be found among her bangles and baudles. Captain Count burned energy as he saw fit, without undue interference."

"Primitive literacy is
redundant. Mere words are expelled. We inaugurate a world of pure
presence. The mind, that intrudes itself between ourselves and those
memories too terrible to know, must keep us moving beyond the grasp of
their claw. To control the flow, it will be necessary that political
order be imposed always temporarily. The state shall enjoy direct,
creative access to the real.It's the end of the twenty-third century.
Earth has violently self-destructed. Venusia, an experimental off-world
colony, survives under the enlightened totalitarianism of the Princeps
Crittendon regime. Using industrialized narcotics, holographic
entertainment, and memory control, Crittendon has turned Venusia into a
self-sustaining system of relative historical inertia. But when
mild-mannered junk dealer Rogers Collectibles finds a book about early
Venusian history, the colony -- once fully immersed in the present --
begins losing its grip on the real. With his Reality-V girlfriend Martha
Dobbs, neuroscop operator Sylvia Yang, his midget friend Niftus
Norrington, and a sentient plant, Rogers wages a war to alter the shape
of spacetime, and in the process, revisions the whole human (and
vegetable) condition"

Chronologically the first novel of Mark von Schlegell published in his extremely imaginative near future universe, Venusia truly made my head spin and I felt dizzy though sitting on a bench when I was trying to imagine the landscape of the novel.

I quite enjoyed
it overall - weird is too banal a word for this one, both in style - modernistic a la MJ Harrison - and in content - from sentient plants to
multidimensional twisting of reality - with the drawback is that you have to
immerse yourself and not nitpick. If you like your sf to be truly crazy, forget Hannu Rajaniemi and read Mark von Schlegell instead, or maybe read both...

"Published by
Semiotext(e) in 2005, Mark von Schlegell's debut novel Venusia was
hailed in the sci-fi and literary worlds as a "breathtaking excursion"
and "heady kaleidoscopic trip," establishing him as an important
practitioner of vanguard science fiction. Mercury Station, the second
book in Von Schlegell's System Series, continues the journey into a
dystopian literary future. It is 2150. Eddard J. Ryan was born in a
laboratory off Luna City, an orphan raised by the Black Rose Army, a
radical post-Earth Irish revolutionary movement. But his first bombing
went wrong and he's been stuck in a borstal on Mercury for decades.
System Space has collapsed and most of human civilization with it, but
Eddie Ryan and his fellow prisoners continue to suffer the
remote-control domination of the borstal and its condescending central
authority, the qompURE MERKUR, programmed to treat them as adolescents.
Yet things could be worse. With little human supervision, the qompURE
can be fooled. There's food and whiskey, and best of all, the girl of
Eddie Ryan's dreams, his long-time friend and comrade Kor? McAllister,
is in the same prison. When his old boss, rich and eccentric chrononaut
Count Reginald Skaw shows up in orbit with an entire interstation
cruiser at his disposal, there's even the possibility of escape....back
in time. Like Venusia, Mercury Station tells a compelling story, drawn
through a labyrinth of future-history sci-fi, medieval hard fantasy, and
cascading samplings of high and low culture. The book is a brilliant
literary assault against the singularity of self and its imprisonment in
Einsteinian spacetime."

Mercury Station is closer to what one would call "essential
sf" than things usually labeled such; it is innovative in quite a few ways,
and while Venusia was weird but with a sort-of-clear-plot/action and I
have not decided yet if Mercury Station truly makes sense plot-wise, the
things thrown in almost casually from a chrono-dynamics theory, to
Quantum computers, to Medieval imagery and action combined with 22nd
century Solar System intrigue, all in a package that will make you a bit
dizzy but still compel you to turn pages, should make this one a must
for any sf-lover. Highly, highly recommended!

"It's 1926, and the
desire to summit the world's highest mountain has reached a fever-pitch among adventurers. Three young friends, eager to take their shot at the
top, accept funding from a grieving mother whose son fell to his death
on Mt. Everest two years earlier. But she refuses to believe he's dead,
and wants them to bring him back alive.

As they set off toward
Everest, the men encounter other hikers who are seeking the boy's body
for their own mysterious reasons. What valuable item could he have been
carrying? What is the truth behind the many disapperances on the
mountain? As they journey to the top of the world, the three friends
face abominable choices, actions--and possibly creatures. A
bone-chilling, pulse-pounding story of supernatural suspense, THE
ABOMINABLE is Dan Simmons at his best."

I finally got a copy of The Abominable and while I browsed the
ending just to make sure people were not jesting when they were telling
what the title referred to (hint: it's not the yeti and the rumors are true, but I do not mind that) I really like how Dan Simmons writes, so I am thinking of reading this seriously as I am in the mood for epic storytelling of a kind or another, though of course serious competition comes soon with the release of David Hair's The Scarlet Tides.

"A young boy in New York
City, Theo Decker, miraculously survives an accident that takes the life
of his mother. Alone and determined to avoid being taken in by the city
as an orphan, Theo scrambles between nights in friends’ apartments and
on the city streets. He becomes entranced by the one thing that reminds
him of his mother, a small, mysteriously captivating painting that soon
draws Theo into the art underworld."

The Goldfinch was a gripping
novel but it left me with a "so what" feeling of contrived plotting and
utter implausibility in its resolution of the main issue, not to speak
of the overall message - you are traumatized as a child/teen, feel free
to break the law and you will be rewarded rather than punished, message
that in the end was starting to become very annoying when Theo
confronted with consequences, gets the expected "get out of jail card"
by authorial fiat.

The first few parts detailing Theo's childhood
and the first few months "after" - when he was 13 - were awesome as they
were relatively reasonable in content and the voice was superb, but
after his deadbeat dad shows up and takes him to Vegas, the book turns
into another "destined boy" who will manage despite the odds and the
book starts becoming wish-fulfillment rather than literary fiction, only
to later turn into another "lives of beautiful people" through the eyes
of an outsider, combined to the same "destined" boy grown up now and
somehow evading consequences of his constant law breaking - or more
precise, the hero is written by the author really above the law and
morality of "regular people' as the trauma of his childhood entitled him
to that.

With constant references to popular sff like Harry Potter and with a lot of similarities in its "destined boy" stuff, the book reads very much like a novel of the present cultural trends and overall it has great narrative momentum and it is well written as style goes, but it is ultimately empty.

Entering
a weird, remote hamlet, Andrei calls himself "a simple wayfarer," but
he is in fact highly compromised: he has no identity papers. Taken under
the wing of the military zone's commander, Andrei is first assigned to
guard the blueberries that supply a nearby bear reserve. He is
surrounded by human wrecks, supernatural umbrellas, birds carrying
plagues, albino twins.

The bears - and an affair with a married
woman - occupy Andrei until his protector is replaced by a new female
commander, "a slender creature, quiet, diaphanous, like a dragonfly,"
and yet an iron-fisted harridan. As things grow ever more alarming,
Andrei becomes a "corpse watchman," standing guard over the dead to
check for any signs of life, and then..."

With a huge reading pile and I still cannot resist when I hear about a book that may sound interesting like the recently translated The Sinistra Zone by Adam Bodor. As I have just found out about it last night and liked the excerpt, I immediately got myself a copy and I will fit it in when in the mood for such.

"When the emperor of
Annur is murdered, his children must fight to uncover the conspiracy—and
the ancient enemy—that effected his death.

Kaden, the heir
apparent, was for eight years sequestered in a remote mountain
monastery, where he learned the inscrutable discipline of monks devoted
to the Blank God. Their rituals hold the key to an ancient power which
Kaden must master before it’s too late. When an imperial delegation
arrives to usher him back to the capital for his coronation, he has
learned just enough to realize that they are not what they seem—and
enough, perhaps, to successfully fight back.

Meanwhile, in the
capital, his sister Adare, master politician and Minister of Finance,
struggles against the religious conspiracy that seems to be responsible
for the emperor’s murder. Amid murky politics, she’s determined to have
justice—but she may be condemning the wrong man.

Their brother
Valyn is struggling to stay alive. He knew his training to join the
Kettral— deadly warriors who fly massive birds into battle—would be
arduous. But after a number of strange apparent accidents, and the last
desperate warning of a dying guard, he’s convinced his father’s
murderers are trying to kill him, and then his brother. He must escape
north to warn Kaden—if he can first survive the brutal final test of the
Kettral."

Another much hyped fantasy debut upcoming in January 2014, The Emperor's Blades by Brian Staveley came a little surprisingly as an advanced review copy in my mailbox a week or so ago and while the first impression, was "look more later as on first glance it is not the disaster of Malice but not the compelling, cannot put down Blood Song either", I finally had the time to take a careful look and as the book moved into the "forget it, not for me" category, I will record here my thoughts and then as mentioned above, just forget about it...

"the
writing just didn't resonate and I browsed through the book and read
the ending which failed to interest me in what came before or what may
come next; from my point of view, I would say the writing style is
pretty nondescript, without emotion or narrative power to absorb a
reader, while the content could have been interesting if the style
worked out

if there is a book this reminded me of, it is the
Acacia trilogy of David Durham, but there I quite liked the style,
though the content veered into stuff I had no real interest in by the
third book..."

A little over a decade ago, Christopher Paolini and Knopf Books for Young Readers released Eragon to the masses. Eragon has since been adapted into a major motion picture, published in 125 countries in 49 languages, and the Inheritance series itself has sold over 35 million copies.

This faux-leather bound edition features gold-foil line art on the cover and six glossy, full-color original illustrations on the interior by award-winning artists who inspired Paolini— John Jude Palancar (theInheritance cycle cover artist), Michael Hague, Donato Giancola,Ciurelo, and Raoule Vitale—as well as Paolini himself. Lastly it will also contain an essay by Christopher Paolini reflecting on this tenth anniversary milestone and on the artists who have inspired his work

Fantasy Book Critic will soon be reviewing this specialedition, and in support of its American publication today via Knopf Books for Young Readers. Knopf Books and Fantasy Book Critic are giving away a copy of “the 10th Anniversary Collector’s Edition of ERAGON” to ONE Lucky Winner!!!

To enter, please send an email to fbcgiveaway@gmail.com with your Name, Mailing Address, and the subject: Eragon10. Giveaway has ENDED and was open to participants in the US ONLY. Thank you for entering and Good Luck!

GIVEAWAY RULES:1) Open To Anyone in USA ONLY 2) Only One Entry Per Household (Multiple Entries Will Be Disqualified)3) Must Enter Valid Email Address, Mailing Address + Name 4) No Purchase Necessary5) Giveaway has ENDED6) Winner Will Be Randomly Selected and Notified By Email7) Personal Information Will Only Be Used In Mailing Out the Book To The Winner

"There will be blood. There will be death. This is the path of anger. . .

Dun-Cadal
has been drinking his life away for years. Betrayed by his friends -
who turned their back on their ideals in favour of a new republic - and
grief stricken at the loss of his apprentice, who saved his life on the
battlefield and whom he trained as a knight in exchange, he's done with
politics, with adventure, and with people.

But people aren't
finished with him - not yet. Viola is a young historian looking for the
last Emperor's sword, and her search not only brings her to Dun-Cadal,
it's also going to embroil them both in a series of assassinations.
Because Dun-Cadal's turncoat friends are being murdered, one by one. . .
by someone who kills in the unmistakable style of an Imperial assassin.
. ."

The Path of Angeris Antoine Rouaud's much hyped world debut in various languages, including the original French (La Voie de la Colere - Le Livre et l'Epee: I)
and English with a literal translation of the title and it has been a highly
expected novel of mine for a long time, so I got a copy the moment it was out and I read it fast as it was quite a page turner.

Story-wise,
it is hard to talk about the book without major spoilers which while I suspected some
on general principles, the author's able misdirection made them a
surprise as execution went. As structure, the book alternates the present - starting as the blurb indicates with the famous general and knight Dun-Cadal with power to command the "animus" - you know what that is from Star Wars and the like - now wasting his final years away in drink, while everything he believed in crumbled around him, and the past where it is recounted the story of his protegee "Frog" who had saved his life in a rebellion and whom Dun Cadal took to court as a squire and helped him realize his dream of becoming a knight too.

As opposed to the usual fantasy genre structure of alternating chapters, the book uses the literary fiction technique of switching in mid-paragraph between the times and as that is done outstandingly, The Path of Anger stands out from the usual genre offering.

While I had some quibbles about the plot especially about the wedding at the end which really didn't make sense at least as our current understanding of the position of the respective characters in the world of the series, the main drawback is the almost complete lack of world building which leads to the novel reading as characters acting in theater with props,
very well done for what is, but in contemporary top tier secondary world fantasy, we need more, namely a sense of the world
beyond a few cliches.

The ending is at a good stopping point, wrapping up the main plot driver of the novel and preparing for what comes next when the "book" and "the sword" of the title series should start revealing their significance - their identities are pretty obvious from the start as the blurb talks about the sword, while the book in cause is mentioned every few pages...

Overall, The Path of Anger has outstanding writing style - I would say arguably better than anything in contemporary secondary world fantasy genre - superbly drawn characters and narrative
momentum and it is a novel that if it were about college students/professors, historical personages in a context and maybe even sf in a logical future of our world, it would have been awesome
but as fantasy it falls short due to minimal world building which modern
"serious" fantasy of the secondary world kind requires to be in the top
tier.

While not yet a top 25 of mine - though it may grow more on me with time and/or new installments - I highly recommendThe Path of Anger for its major positives and I am definitely interested
in the sequel as I want to see both what happens to the main characters and where the storyline of the book and the sword goes...

"If your children were forced to testify against you, what terrible secrets would they reveal?

Moscow
1945. As Stalin and his courtiers celebrate victory over Hitler, shots
ring out. On a nearby bridge, a teenage boy and girl lie dead.

But
this is no ordinary tragedy and these are no ordinary teenagers, but
the children of Russia's most important leaders who attend the most
exclusive school in Moscow.

Is it murder? A suicide pact? Or a conspiracy against the state?

Directed
by Stalin himself, an investigation begins as children are arrested and
forced to testify against their friends - and their parents. This
terrifying witch-hunt soon unveils illicit love affairs and family
secrets in a hidden world where the smallest mistakes will be punished
with death."

One Night in Winter is an excellent novel which is loosely related to Sashenka as many characters from that book, including one of the main heroes, appear here. There are also allusions to what happened in Sashenka, but One Night in Winter can be read independently as all the back story is recounted.

Taking place over a few months in 1945, with some flashbacks to the late stages of the war and an epilogue jumping in time to 1953 and then to the early 70's to conclude the several threads, One Night in Winter follows the following main characters:

Decorated war hero, Marshal Hercules Satinov, intimate friend and protegee of Stalin who often refers to the 20 years younger Georgian as "boy" and whose four surviving children, including the six year old Mariko play an important role in the novel too.

18 year old Andrei Kurbski, son of an "enemy of the people", who has just been allowed to return to Moscow with his mother after almost a decade of exile in Central Asia, while also being accepted - to his considerable surprise - to the elite high school 801 where all the Party bigwigs send their children. One little tidbit from the past that turns out to be important is Svetlana - Stalin's youngest daughter, now 19 and a college student - time at the school...

While an outsider in the beginning, Andrei soon starts making friends with the affluent children of the nomenklatura and through him we see the lives of the rich and privileged families of the Red Tsar's Court from a "normal" perspective.

Serafima Romanshkina, the beautiful and glamorous girl at the school whom all the boys are in love with, is the daughter of famous actress Sophia Zeitlin, Jewish, cousin of Sashenka, intimate of Stalin and courted by both pervert Beria, the secret police chief and by self proclaimed ladies' man, Victor Abakumov, the chief of Military Intelligence and main rival of Beria. Following in the steps of her mom, the serious and contemplative Serafima is courted by Stalin's surviving son, Vasily, a 24 old drunken and dissolute air force general known as the "crown prince" among the elite, though Stalin is quite tough with him too. But Serafima has a dangerous secret and that may turn to be the undoing of all...

Dr.Daria Dorova, Dashka, personal physician of the elite and cardiologist, later Minister of Health, married with Stalin's hatchet man, feared bureaucrat and executioner, GenrikhDorov and whose four children, most notably, 10 year old Senka,
nicknamed "the Little Professor" have also very important roles to
play. Senka's - a 10 year old remember - verbal duel with the experienced
secret police interrogators are among the highlights of the middle, dark
part of the novel. A glamorous woman like Sophia Zeitlin, Dashka has her own secrets that could prove dangerous...

And then there are many other secondary characters, including Stalin and his court, all with very memorable portraits, and last but not least the teachers of the school, including seemingly stiff principal with a (secret) heart, 50 year old "spinster" of the revolution, Kapitolina Medvedeva, political hack and deputy principal, Innokenty Rimm whose mis-adventures are in turn comical and horrifying and most popular teacher, Benya Golden, whom we last saw destined for the Gulag in Sashenka, unexpectedly returned from the living dead and somehow even having got a position at elite high school 801 to boot...

One Night in Winter is anemotional
page turner, quite brutal especially in its middle part and alternating the absurdities of communism
with its tragedies: kids denouncing parents and 6 year old children - of
Stalin's immediate collaborators - jailed and interrogated by the secret
police, while a 10 year old was being threatened with being jailed until 12 when
he legally could be executed, while teenagers'
poetic musings taken as conspiracies against the state...

As it happens pretty much of the book is inspired by reality with all the above actually having happened in "the real life" under communism, including 11
year old children kept in jail until they turned 12 and could be given the 9
gram treatment - ie shot in the back of the head, while younger children were jailed, as their siblings denounced them and their parent. Exceptional narrative flow and memorable characters made One Night in Winter one of my big time favorites of this year and I think the author managed to raise his prose skills one step up from the compelling but on occasion grating Sashenka, so I look forward to anything Mr. Sebag Montefiore will be putting out.

******************************************************************

"French Academician and Nazi sympathizer Paul-Jean Husson writes a letter to his local SS officer in the autumn of 1942.

Tormented
by an illicit passion for Ilse, his German daughter-in-law, Husson has
made a decision that will devastate several lives, including his own.

The
letter is intended to explain his actions. It is a dramatic, sometimes
harrowing story that begins in the years leading up to the war, when
following the accidental drowning of his daughter, Husson's previously
gilded life begins to unravel.

And through Husson's confession,
Romain Slocombe gives the reader a startling picture of a man's journey:
from pillar of the French Establishment and World War One hero to
outspoken supporter of Nazi ideology and the Vichy government."

Monsieur Le Comandant is a novel that is more horrifying than anything in the
horror genre; it is also a book that cannot to be put down as it
ratchets the tension gradually and one keeps hoping that the narrator
will just shred the letter in the end...

As noted in the blurb, the novel has as main conceit a letter being written in 1942 by an early 60's famous
French Catholic novelist, member of the Academy, decorated WW1 veteran
who had lost his forearm in battle, had many affairs in his time, being now
quite well off if not rich and whose only son had married in the 30's a
German actress with whom he became quite fascinated with, to the point of
both conspiring to hide her Jewish origins and amplifying his official
antisemitism to the no return point of vitriolic articles, denunciations
etc...

While a lot of the "what happened" from the letter is
predictable, the "how it happened" brings quite a few twists and turns and the
narrative flow is extremely powerful.

Dark, brutal and excellent
stuff that reminds one of two things - how the gangster regimes of the
20th century - National Socialism and Communism - casually destroyed lives
and brought up the scum of the society who enjoyed doing the dirty work
for the leaders and then how under such circumstances it was very hard
to remain innocent and one either became one of the perpetrators or one of the
victims - or of course both.

The Kate Daniels series by Ilona Andrews is one of my favorite ones. I know that I'm not the only one. So I was ecstatic when Bastard, Kristen, Maja & Melissa agreed to be a part of this interview. This series has captivated all of us & my heartfelt thanks to all four of them for their time, enthusiasm & answers. So read ahead to see what each of them thinks about this amazing series (WARNING:Mild spoilers for books 1-5 so don't read ahead if you haven't read the books yet and dislike spoilers!)Q] Thank you to all of you for agreeing to participate in this interview. Could you tell us how each of you discovered this wonderful series? Kristen: Thank you for inviting me to participate! Kate Daniels is one of my favorite series, and these are books I love to discuss.
I discovered the Kate Daniels series the way I’ve discovered many of the books I’ve enjoyed over the last few years—by recommendations from other book bloggers. Angie from Angieville in particular was influential in making me want to pick up these books; her enthusiasm for series she loves is contagious and she has excellent taste!

I’m very grateful that many people who recommended me the Kate Daniels series told me I had to read the third book even if I wasn’t crazy about the first two. While I did enjoy the first book, I may not have picked up the next two books quite as quickly had I not been so eager to read this amazing third book I kept hearing about—and I was completely addicted to the series for life once I did!

Maja: I discovered Kate the same way I discovered all my urban fantasy series at the beginning – it was recommended to me by a friend on GoodReads. By the time Kate came my way, I’d already read so much UF in such a short time, my head was practically spinning 24/7. But even amidst all that great UF, she clearly stood out.

Melissa: Thank you for inviting me to share about a series I’ve fallen in love with.

Aaah, well… I was a late comer to the Kate Daniels series. I…was slacking and can kick myself for taking so long. Although, the good side, I was able to go right to the next book with no wait for the first 5 books. Now, I’m with the rest of the world waiting for the magic Ilona and Gordon create.

It took about…three authors and three bloggers, one of which gifted me Magic Bites, to guilt me into loving these characters and world with them. Now, I’m thankful to be part of this amazing circle of fans.

Bastard: Well I discovered it through you, Mihir. That’s the short, the long, and the boring answer. Oh, I used my computer with internet connection.

Not that I wouldn’t have discovered it without your help on my own eventually, of course. So don’t even think of gloating, or I’ll hunt you down.

Q] Among the six books released so far, which one is your favorite and why? Kristen: It’s a really close call between Magic Strikesand Magic Bleeds, but I’m going to have to go with Magic Strikes. This was the book that completely hooked me on reading the series, and it’s also the one I found most riveting from start to finish. Kate’s sense of humor and narrative voice pulled me in from the first page, and I loved reading about her interactions with all the other characters from Andrea to Curran to Saiman. I also really liked the focus on the Midnight Games, and all of the fight scenes kept me on the edge of my seat even though I often find lots of action scenes dull.

Plus Kate finally, FINALLY, revealed why she was so worried about traces of her blood and filled in more of her history. I really loved how Ilona Andrews handled the mysteries surrounding Kate—as Kate began opening up more to the people around her in the books, she also began opening up to the reader by disclosing more information about herself.

The short version: I loved everything about Magic Strikes and consider it one of my favorite books in the world.

Maja: Oh, that would be Magic Bleeds (book 4, for those of you who don’t know). First, a very superficial reason: it’s the longest. More time with Kate equals more happiness on my part. Aside from that, it is by far the most emotional and the most satisfying of them all. The stakes are high, the emotional investment is huge, and Kate is clearly at her best, even when she’s drugged and bleeding. I think this is where I truly understood Kate as a character for the very first time and I got to see the absolute best side of her.

Melissa: Hmm, each has its own specialty to it. But, for some reason I’m partial to the area fighting in Magic Strikes. Not only was there amazing action, we got to see many characters step up with their special gifts, Saiman in his true form, and Curran with Kate getting a bit more complicated. But, Kate proves herself a true Alpha with the leadership she has over the crew that goes in to the fighting ring. This one also raises the stakes for Kate and her history along with the story line.

Bastard: I think it has to be without a doubt Magic Strikes. For me it carried the same weight that Grave Peril did for The Dresden Files, which coincidentally is the 3rd novel in the series too. It’s my “acid test” novel when I recommend the series to others; I implore them to at least read until book 3 and decide from there if they want to continue or not. Of course, most seem to enjoy them since the beginning, but for those who don’t and are fans of urban fantasy, please give until the 3rd novel a try.

Magic Strikes just took the series to another level, and to me it’s where the series took a big leap in quality and interest. And of course, the action was fantastic in this one with lots of kickass scenes. It didn’t stop with Kate alone; the supporting cast stepped up too solidifying the Kate Daniels roster. If there’s one thing that can rival the action here, it’s the great character interaction. Magic Strikes delivered on the series potential and cemented the series among my favorites.

Q] The series’ main antagonist Roland hasn’t made an appearance yet but there are many theories about him and his past. Do you have any theories bout him or if you had to guess his identity, what would be your most educated one? Kristen:Magic Bleeds dropped a lot of hints about Roland’s identity and ever since reading the scene where Kate tells the story of the first vampire, I’ve been convinced that Roland was formerly known as Nimrod. Kate connected Roland’s story to both the Bible and writings by Jewish scholars, plus she says that Roland has a son she refers to as Abe with two sons known as Jacob and Esau. That in itself seems fitting with a king from the Old Testament whom Abraham is supposed to be descended from.

Nimrod is also associated with the Tower of Babel, and given that Roland’s known for building towers, I suspect he was the builder of the Tower of Babel. The Tower of Babel is also supposed to have resulted in numerous languages, and one of Kate’s abilities involves power words, which makes me wonder if perhaps these words are so powerful because they were from the first language before the fall of the Tower of Babel.

Maja: To say that I have a right to make educated guesses in this case would be pure insanity. I have a huge amount of knowledge on Greek mythology because it’s impossible to get a Master’s degree in literature in Europe and avoid it, but everything else I know comes either from Ilona and Gordon, or Kevin Hearne. But at the end of the day, I don’t think it matters that much. And I’m still not convinced that we know all there is to know about him. Remember Erra mentioning moments of sentimentality?

There were a few hints here and there that opened up the possibility of him being a bit more nuanced; not the Big Bad we all think he is, or not only that. After all, everything Kate thought she knew about her family ended up being wrong, or at least a matter of perspective, so why not this too? I don't know, perhaps it's just my idealistic nature shining through, but I have a feeling he might surprise us somehow. After approx. two thousand pages of nothing but stories about him, each more terrifying than the last, my hope is that things won't be quite as straightforward as we expect.

If anyone can pull it off, it's Ilona and Gordon. Oh, and I do hope he has a sense of humor. It must run in the family.

Melissa: There is a great deal of mythology in the world Kate lives in. We see many of it come to life through each book. And each book is a new major player in powers. As to who or what Roland is, I’m not sure. I hate to admit it but I don’t know enough about mythology to make an educated guess. But man, am I looking forward to Roland's showdown with Kate, Curran, and their pack.

Bastard: Honestly? I haven’t given it any thought. I’ll let others theorize and guess at his identity, but I really don’t care that much to try and figure out who he is. While it might be fun, ultimately I feel it’s a foolish errand. But to each his own. When it’s revealed, I’ll try and look back at all the hints and evidence that was there, but otherwise, I’m quite content to not dwell on it. Just sit back and enjoy the ride.

Q] Now with Kate Daniels being such a fantastic POV character, it’s no wonder that the series has so many fans. However the authors have also created a wonderful side cast. So who’s your favorite character besides Kate in the series and why? Kristen: One aspect of the series I love is that the secondary characters are so well-developed with their own personalities. It’s tough to pick a favorite, but I think my current favorite secondary character is one of the newer ones: Roman, a volhv of Chernobog. On the surface, he is the stereotypical villain. He is the servant of a god Kate refers to as the god of “Everything Bad and Evil,” and he even looks evil according to both Kate and Andrea. Yet he’s actually a personable, fun sort of guy with a sense of humor who treats being a servant of darkness as a 9 to 5 job. I love this combination of darkness and light and think it makes him a really unique, interesting character.

(This answer may be cheating a bit since much of what I know about Roman is from Gunmetal Magic, the spin-off book about Andrea, instead of one of the Kate-centered books, but I was intrigued by Roman when he was first introduced in Magic Slays and glad to see him show up again.)

Maja: Oh, that would be Aunt B. She is such a strong presence and she takes over the scene whenever she shows up. I enjoy her machinations so much, and even more, I enjoy that she’s extremely violent, but also this loving, grandmotherly type at the same time.
I adore Derek too, of course. He is a fascinating character and the more we learn about him, the more I love him.

Melissa: So many love Curran, and the banter he carries on with Kate is amazing. And I love that it doesn’t fall flat with being a couple. But as the side cast…gah, that’s hard! I very much enjoy Derek. He’s come a long way, and still has a far stretch to go in life. I even found I really enjoyed Roman and Hugh in the latest books. I have to say the personality of all the characters is very strong, and is part of the magic to love here.

Bastard: I’d be tempted to say Curran or maybe Derek, but I still have to go with Julie. I’m a big fan of hers. I have a love and hate relationship with kids in novels, as some can be quite the little shits and annoying as fuck, but I really have a soft spot for those that I find to be awesome. And Julie certainly falls into the latter. I also like when kids kick some ass.

I really like her attitude, though I’m aware we’ve barely begun scrapping the surface of Julie’s character, I think there’s some real potential here and a lot more to her than we’re aware of at the moment. When the authors were considering making a spin-off, Julie was my choice for it.

If I’m recalling correctly, I think they even tried making one. They were going Young Adult with it, though I don’t think that’s necessary, nor would it be my preference. Don’t see the need for avoiding making an adult urban fantasy novel merely because the protagonist is a kid. But we’ll see what role she plays in the future. After the events of Magic Slays (book 5), I’ve been very curious of what’s going to happen with her; storyline’s brimming with potential in my opinion.

Q] What moment in the books so far has been the most surprising or most enjoyable?
Kristen: There are a LOT of surprising and enjoyable moments! I think the moment that stuck with me the most was when Kate used her power to save Curran in the arena toward the end of Magic Strikes. Kate’s been trying to hide that she’s Roland’s daughter her entire life, yet she does this with Hugh d’Ambray watching, knowing it will give away her secret. It’s already a very tense scene, wondering what will happen to Kate, but I think it also showed a lot about the changes she’s undergone since the first book in the series.
But I’m also partial to the intense Kate vs. Hugh swordfight in Magic Rises!

Maja: The fights in the Midnight Games (book 3) were an absolute delight! That’s when the series went from great to absolutely perfect for me. It’s the starting point of my addiction. :)

Then there is Kate’s fight with Erra (book 4) in front of her apartment. Where else can you find a fight that starts with a tea and a fairly pleasant conversation?

Melissa: Each book has an amazing scene or whole happenings that have caught my attention. I think the most surprising moment is the first time we see Saiman in his true form. I never thought that was what he was.

Bastard: I don’t think there’s much to surprise me at this point, but I’d say the most enjoyable moment for me was when Kate took control of the Pack when Curran was indisposed (book 4). It was a fantastic example of awesome scenic violence. Little to no talk, hard hitting, fast moving bloody action and violence in a way that displayed how much of a badass Kate is, and I don’t think anything before or after has really compared. Quite frankly, I’m disappointed in how rare it is to find these kinds of scenes in fiction, portrayed in this manner. So I take a lot of joy when I come across them, and cherish them.

Actually, I might have been a bit surprised on how deadly efficient Kate was against the Pack. Not because I questioned Kate’s skills, but I would’ve thought she would hold a bit back. But man did she fuck some characters up in there, some permanently and without prejudice. I was in reading bliss.

Can we get more of that? Thanks.

Q] If you had to ask one question to Ilona & Gordon after reading all the books, what would it be? Kristen: That’s a tough question! Part of me would like to ask them about Roland’s identity, but I’d really rather wait and read it when it’s revealed in one of the books. I’d love to know more about their research, how they choose myths, and how they decide to incorporate them into the story since I love how they tie different mythologies into the books. I’d also like to ask them about their approach to writing fights since they have a rare gift for writing memorable clashes. I’d be interested in learning more about on their collaborative process and how they handle disagreements about what should happen in the books. But I guess what I would most want to know is…

When can I read the next book?

Maja: Is it stupid to hope for a spin-off series with Derek at its center?
No, seriously now, they are so present on the internet and so good to their fans that they pretty much answer all my questions before I even think to ask them.

Melissa: I’ve probably missed the answer to this in my reading, but wanted to solve it for my own peace of mind. At the end of Magic Strikes, Kate lost a lot of blood in that cage and had made blood spikes that dissipate into black dust. Is this all the blood she lost, or some of it and if some of it what happened to any of the blood left behind?

Bastard: Why the heck did you try to end the series prematurely?! Please don’t do it again.

I mean, after Magic Slayswas published it seemed like the plan was for a spin-off novel and two more novels in the Kate Daniels sequence to finish it up. But anyone who’s been following the series could tell that there was no way to close the series appropriately within those limits. I don’t know what led to those circumstances, but I’m just glad we get a bit (a lot?) more of Kate Daniels for the time being.

*----------*----------*----------*

BLOGGER INFORMATION:

Kristen's Bio - Kristen Bell is a web developer at the end of the Internet, aka rural Maine. From this corner of the web she writes Fantasy Cafe, a site dedicated to discussion and reviews of fantasy and science fiction books.

Maja's Bio - Maja is a 29-year-old mother and philologist, owner of The Nocturnal Library book blog. When she's not accompanying her favorite characters on their exciting journeys, she's usually at home, baking muffins and thinking about linguistics, which is both her job and her favorite thing in the universe. She mostly reads and reviews Young Adult literature, but Urban Fantasy will always be her first choice.

Melissa's Bio - A fantasy reader looking to escape from the mundane paper shuffle of daylight. Dark falls and I get to enjoy the many journeys through fantasy worlds of all sorts (along with lunch hour). I have a family who shakes their heads at me, as I always have my nose buried in a book, and two German Shepherds at my call. I prefer to live in my own version of the world, no matter how weird and distorted it is -- there is always magic there to explore, hence the blog name My World...in words and pages.

Bastard's Bio - Bastard from Bastard Books and other crap, always hated reading until he got bored one Summer and decided that a fantasy novel would go nicely with a beer six pack while relaxing on the beach. Now he reads as much as he can, whether he's bored or not; whether he has a beer at hand or not.NOTE: Kate Daniels series cover montage courtesy of Paranormal Book Lovers. Roland (Shadow) picture courtesy of Shadowthief. Wereanimals picture courtesy of Adam Syborski. Kristen, Maja,Melissa & Bastard's pictures courtesy themselves. All other pictures courtesy of Ilona Andrews.